make-pathname

make-absolute-pathname

Returns a string that names the file with the components DIRECTORY, FILENAME and (optionally) EXTENSION with SEPARATOR being the directory separation indicator (usually / on UNIX systems and \ on Windows, defaulting to whatever platform this is running on). DIRECTORY can be #f (meaning no directory component), a string or a list of strings. FILENAME and EXTENSION should be strings or #f. make-absolute-pathname returns always an absolute pathname.

pathname-strip-directory

pathname-strip-extension

Return a new pathname with the specified component of PATHNAME stripped.

normalize-pathname

[procedure](normalize-pathname PATHNAME [PLATFORM])

Performs a simple "normalization" on the PATHNAME, suitably for PLATFORM, which should be one of the symbols windows or unix and defaults to on whatever platform is currently in use. All relative path elements and duplicate separators are processed and removed. If NAME ends with a / or is empty, the appropriate slash is appended to the tail. Tilde ~ and variable $<name>/... expansion is also done.

No directories or files are actually tested for existence; this procedure only canonicalises path syntax.

directory-null?

[procedure](directory-null? DIRECTORY)

Does the DIRECTORY consist only of path separators and the period?

DIRECTORY may be a string or a list of strings.

decompose-directory

[procedure](decompose-directory DIRECTORY)

Returns 3 values: the base-origin, base-directory, and the directory-elements for the DIRECTORY.

base-origin

a string or #f. The drive, if any.

base-directory

a string or #f. A directory-separator when DIRECTORY is an absolute-pathname.

directory-elements

a list-of string or #f. The non-directory-separator bits.

DIRECTORY is a string.

On Windows (decompose-directory "c:foo/bar") => "c:" #f ("foo" "bar")

Temporary files and directories

create-temporary-file

[procedure](create-temporary-file [EXTENSION])

Creates an empty temporary file and returns its pathname. If EXTENSION is not given, then .tmp is used. If the environment variable TMPDIR, TEMP or TMP is set, then the pathname names a file in that directory. If none of the environment variables is given the location of the temporary file defaults to /tmp if it exists or the current-directory

create-temporary-directory

[procedure](create-temporary-directory)

Creates an empty temporary directory and returns its pathname. If the environment variable TMPDIR, TEMP or TMP is set, then the temporary directory is created at that location.

Deleting a file without signalling an error

delete-file*

[procedure](delete-file* FILENAME)

If the file FILENAME exists, it is deleted and #t is returned. If the file does not exist, nothing happens and #f is returned.

File move/copy

file-copy

[procedure](file-copy ORIGFILE NEWFILE #!optional CLOBBER BLOCKSIZE)

Copies ORIGFILE (a string denoting some filename) to NEWFILE, BLOCKSIZE bytes at a time. BLOCKSIZE defaults to 1024, and must be a positive integer. Returns the number of bytes copied on success, or errors on failure. CLOBBER determines the behaviour of file-copy when NEWFILE is already extant. When set to #f (default), an error is signalled. When set to any other value, NEWFILE is overwritten. file-copy will work across filesystems and devices and is not platform-dependent.

file-move

[procedure](file-move ORIGFILE NEWFILE #!optional CLOBBER BLOCKSIZE)

Moves ORIGFILE (a string denoting some filename) to NEWFILE, with the same semantics as file-copy, above. file-move is safe across filesystems and devices (unlike file-rename). It is possible for an error to be signalled despite partial success if NEWFILE could be created and fully written but removing ORIGFILE fails.